Australia Just Ratified A Climate Agreement That Won't Work Without Trump

The Federal Government has ratified the Paris climate agreement, formalising Australia's commitment to cutting carbon emissions and slowing climate change. This follows the Paris agreement entering into force on 4 November 2016, and Australia signing the agreement back in April.

But the United States is likely to drop out of the Paris Agreement or the overall global climate convention, and new research from The Australian National University (ANU) suggests a Trump Presidency could create new opportunities to reduce carbon emissions.

"This is an important step towards keeping global temperatures to below two degrees celsius," Dr Helen McGregor, anARC Future Fellow in the School of Earth Sciences and Environmental Sciences at the University of Wollongong says of Australia's move.

"But make no mistake, Australia's commitment to cut emissions by 26-28 per cent by 2030 will not be enough to meet the two degree target. I encourage our leaders to plan and implement deeper cuts, the sooner the better — the climate system waits for no politician."

Dr Luke Kemp from ANU said Donald Trump's victory at the US election could be the moment that keeping global warming under two degrees Celsius became unachievable.

"A future President Trump can, and likely will, drop out of the Paris Agreement. Direct withdrawal will take four years," said Dr Kemp from the ANU Fenner School of Environment and Society. "Trump could instead drop out from the overall climate convention. That would only take one year and would result in automatic withdrawal from the Paris Agreement".

In any case, Trump's domestic energy policy will lead to the US overshooting its domestic targets, Dr Kemp says, emphasising the US withdrawing from the Paris Agreement, or blatantly missing its climate targets, could be near fatal for a deal which relies on being global.

"The Paris Agreement sacrificed binding emissions cuts and finance for US participation, which was a short-sighted strategy that will cost the world dearly," he said.

Dr Kemp said a Trump Presidency could also create opportunities for governments internationally to tackle climate change.

"A protectionist Trump administration could bring the idea of climate-trade measures back to the global table. The Paris Agreement could be amended to have trade measures against countries which are not part of the deal," he said.

Alternatively the European Union and China could be pushed by Trump's trade policies towards imposing a carbon price on imports, Dr Kemp said.

"Such actions will be more beneficial for the climate than the current Paris Agreement ever could have been," he said. "The reaction of the EU and China will determine whether the 2016 US election becomes an epitaph for the climate, or a moment of new hope."

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